Technology

The $12 Billion DeepSeek of Social Media Is Brewing Beneath Our Feet And No One is Ready for What’s Coming

By Cameron Aaron, Investigative Journalist and Author

INDIANAPOLIS, IN, UNITED STATES, March 12, 2025

Sometimes, disruption announces itself with a billion-dollar IPO and media spectacle. Other times, it’s a storm building quietly, right under everyone’s feet, until it’s too late to stop it. There’s something happening beneath our feet, something so disruptive, so massive, and so deeply embedded in the future of AI and social media that most people haven’t even realized it yet. It’s called YayEye by Tech Raid, and it’s not just another social media platform, it’s an entirely new class of AI-driven digital infrastructure, one that fuses social media with LLMs into a single, unstoppable force.

Throw everything you know about social media out the window. YayEye is a multi-LLM ecosystem powered by GPUs and LPUs. A full-scale, AI native posting and social media engine that obliterates the need for separate tools like ChatGPT, Canva, Midjourney, and RunwayML. YayEye doesn’t just merge these functions, it reinvents the way posts are created. 

You Control Your Ads, Not Meta. Creators pick their own advertisers from a curated ad marketplace, so they don’t get forced into Meta’s engagement-farming ad model. YayEye uses its own digital currency, YayCoins, directly linked to USD. Users can choose to keep 100% of their ad revenue, not the 55% cut platforms like YouTube and TikTok impose. Users can instantly repost their AI-generated YayEye posts to any other platform, turning YayEye into the control center of social media, not just another feed to scroll through. It blends the immersive experience of Netflix, the social fluidity of Instagram, and the intuitive navigation of 3D maps; built for control, not consumption.

According to Abhilash, Co Founder of Tech Raid, who is the Data & AI Lead at Google ANZ for Media and Telecom, the full potential of LLMs (Large Language Models) has yet to be realized. While AI adoption has surged, he believes that most applications remain surface-level, failing to showcase the true depth and capability of these models.

“AI today is still in its infancy when it comes to real-world application. While we’ve seen progress in chatbots, image generation, and automation, no platform has pushed the boundaries of what LLMs can truly achieve at scale, until now. YayEye is not just an incremental step forward; it is a complete redefinition of how AI interacts with users. This is the first large scale platform to merge social media, AI-driven content creation, and monetization into a single, seamless ecosystem. With YayEye, the world will finally see what LLMs are truly capable of.”

A CHANCE ENCOUNTER WITH FOUNDER OF TECH RAID & YAYEYE

To understand why YayEye is different, you need to understand who’s behind it.

A chance encounter with Satvik Gangavarapu, The Crocodile Dundee of tech, left me questioning everything I thought I knew about founders.

If you don’t know him yet, it’s because he doesn’t want you to.  Gangavarapu’ s not a polished billionaire in a black turtleneck. My chance encounter with the guy? He had just pulled an all-nighter on some intense AI sessions, sipping beer while pushing machine learning to its limits. A quick nap later, on what was supposedly his ‘resting day’, he drove 87 miles, skydived to clear his head, then hit the ocean for a scuba dive before grabbing a burger and heading back to Ballarat. He looks like he stepped straight out of a cyberpunk revolution, speaks like a street prophet, and carries the confidence of someone who’s always two steps ahead.

Tech Raid Founder & CEO Satvik Gangavarapu – Photograph by Hari Prasad

Born in India, established in Australia, Harvard educated, and battle tested in the world of distressed assets and troubled business situations, Satvik isn’t just a tech guy; he’s the kind of person who’s seen businesses rise, fall, get torn apart, and reborn from the ashes across His experience spans infrastructure, utilities, technology, healthcare, services and the public sector giving him firsthand and hands-on insights to add to his complexity. His presence is intense, but his method? Calculated chaos. He spent over an hour breaking down AI’s impact on people and geopolitical stability, then casually switch to discussing his favourite beers and whisky before jumping on to talking about finance, infrastructure, energy, manufacturing, in one breath, and then switched back to scuba diving, and why social media is fundamentally broken. A disruptor who doesn’t show his cards, Gangavarapu operates like an enigma, the kind of founder you can’t quite pin down but can’t afford to ignore.

Tech CEOs typically fit into two categories. There are the corporate clean cuts like Zuckerberg, Nadella, Cook, Pichai who carefully navigate public perception and regulatory scrutiny. Then there are the loud disruptors like Musk, Chamath, Balaji who are shaking up industries with grandiose, often controversial claims. Then there’s Gangavarapu, who doesn’t fit either mold, though for a second, I felt like I was talking to Musk, “if Musk had taken in the Australian outback, lived on adrenaline, and preferred Guinness to Twitter fights”. If you want to find him, you don’t go to a Silicon Valley boardroom, you go into the outback. I asked him if I could get future access and he agreed because I was an upcoming journalist.

The Financial Backbone

The ambitious scale of YayEye demands significant AI resources, reflecting the platform’s potential to reshape the global social media, content creation, and digital advertising landscape.

According to Rocher Cyrus, CPA (former KPMG and PwC manager) and Managing Partner at GIM.CPA who is leading the series funding, YayEye is currently in advanced discussions with investors at a valuation of approximately $12 billion.

This valuation is rooted in the massive AI infrastructure required to power a multi-LLM social media ecosystem at scale, a model that has never been attempted at this level for the mass market making YayEye the world’s first B2C platform entirely built using LLMs.

While the company’s official conservative target is 200 million users in its first year, Rocher argued that the real number could be significantly higher. 

For further information or clarifications Rocher can be reached on rcyrus@gim.cpa

YayEye vs. Zuckerberg’s Empire: The Collision Is Inevitable

If there’s one company that should be worried, it’s Meta.

Because Zuckerberg’s social empire is built on ad-driven engagement, and YayEye? It’s built to challenge that system entirely. YayEye flips the entire model, turning social media into a content-generation engine that users actually control.

Here’s the truth, DeepSeek disrupted AI search, and the industry scrambled. YayEye is about to do the same for social media.

The difference? DeepSeek caught the world off guard. YayEye is coming in prepared. It’s not rushing to market with half-baked AI. It’s strategically building, keeping its cards close until the moment is right.

And when that moment comes? 

The platforms that rely on ads, engagement farming, and algorithmic control are going to feel the biggest power shift in digital history.

For the first time, AI won’t control social media. It will free it

And if you’re not paying attention? YayEye is about to shake the ground you’re standing on. The world is about to find out what happens when Crocodile Dundee decides to take on the biggest players in tech. 

If history has taught us anything? The ones who break the rules are the ones who change the game.

 

AUTHOR CONTACT

Cameron Aaron
Napolis LLC
contact@camronaaron.com

 

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